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Page 26 text:
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COLLEGE OE PHARMACY On January 10, 1938, the Division of Phar- macy was separated from the College of Arts and Sciences and established as the College of of Pharmacy. The college, under the direction of Dean Larwood, is housed in University Hall, a large and beautiful limestone building, erected in 1931, in which four well equipped labora- tories are assigned for the study of pharmacy. In addition there are ofhces, a research laboratory, and a dispensing laboratory. In the dispensary each student has an individual desk fully equipped with apparatus and materials. Displays of current pharmaceutical products are set up to increase the students, familiarity with his field. The college holds membership in the Ameri- can Association of Colleges of Pharmacy, is recognized as an institution in good standing by the State Board of Pharmacy of Ohio, and is accredited hy the American Council on Phar- maceutical Education. The curriculum prepares the student for employment as a pharmacist fafter passing the State Board of Pharmacyj, as a pharmaceutical chemist for a pharmaceutical manufacturer, as a representative of one of these companies, as an employee in the manufacture of pharma- ceuticals, and for graduate work in pharmacy and allied fields. There is, on the campus, a chapter of the international honorary pharmaceutical fra- ternity, Kappa Psi, which was founded in 1879 and incorporated in 1903. The local chapter, Beta Lambda, was organized in 1925. There is also a local women's honorary pharmaceutical society, Kappa Gamma, which was established in 1945. YJ gy-X ,ik DR. CHARLES W. LARWOOD DR. CHARLES W. LARWOOD . . . dean of the college of pharmacy . . . born in Arkansas . . . attended Sallisaw, Oklahoma public schools . . , graduated from Connors High School, Warner, Oklahoma . . . received B.S. degree from Uni- versity of Oklahoma in 1925 . . . received M.S. degree from Oklahoma A. and M. in 1929 . . . awarded Ph.D. from Michigan State University in 1939 . . . professor of pharmacy at Ferris In- stitute from 1929 to 1934 . . . dean of pharmacy at the University of Grand Rapids from 1936 to 1942 . . . member of Kappa Psi, Chemical Society, Pharmaceutical Association . . . wrote article en- titled, Toxicity of Waters of the South West, published in Science in 1930 . . . joined University of Toledo faculty as professor of pharmacy in January, 1946 . . . served with the armed forces during the second world war.
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Page 25 text:
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COLLEGE OE LAW DR. CHARLES W. FORNOFF DR. CHARLES WRIGHT FORNOFF .... dean of the college of law of the University of Toledo . . . born in Pana, Illinois . . . high school education completed in Pana 1918 . . . received B.A. degree with highest honors from University of Illinois in 1922 . . . received M.A. degree from same university in 1923 . . . awarded Ph.D. degree from the University of Illinois in 1926 . . . served as an instructor in policital science at the Uni- versity of Arkansas from 1928 to 1929 . . . re- ceived a .I.D. degree from the University of Illinois in 1932 . . . served as assistant professor of law at the University of Arkansas and at the University of Utah . . . became an associate pro- fessor of law at the University of Idaho in 1938 . . . published a 5,000 word review of the Scott and Simpson case dealing with judical remedies in 1938 and a review of Gosnellis book, Getting Out The Vote, in 1927 . . . received Phi Beta Kappa key in 1921. The College of Law was organized in 1906 and became a part of the University of Toledo in 1909. A law degree was granted until 1922, when the school became a division of the Col- lege of Arts and Sciences, with only a Certificate of Law being granted from 1922 to 1933. In 1934- the law school was re-established as a separate college granting the degree Bachelor of Laws. The College of Law is one of the four law schools in Ohio which are members of the Association of American Law Schools. It has received the final approval of the American Bar Association and has been a charter member of the League of Ohio Law Schools since the founding of the League in 1934. The college has a working library of 15.000 volumes. The students also have access to the Toledo Law Association library of 20,000 vol- umes, to which they are invited by special action of the Association. The law library at the University contains the statutes and reports of Ohio and the United States, the status of 11 other states, the Re- porter System, the reports of 29 states prior thereto, the English reports including the full English Reprint, complete sets of 15 of the leading law reviews, 50 law reviews which are received currently, and a large collection of texts, digests, encyclopedias, annotated and selected cases.
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Page 27 text:
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DEANS RAYMOND L. CARTER, Dean of Administra- tion. Class schedules, commencements, high school visiting teams, and summer registration all come under his supervision. In addition to these duties he is Direc- tor of the Junior College, and advisor to Arx, men's honorary. Dr. Carter's versatility and efhciency, so useful in an administrative job, serve him well in his duties. His work ranges all the way from discovering and hiring new instructors to negotiating with the government for new buildings. 1 i i M. KATHRYN SCHWAB, Dean of Wonien, is one of the busiest women on campus. Her regular duties include welcoming new women students at the University and advising them throughout the year. In addition, she is advisor to Pan-Hellenic Council and Peppers, and is in charge of the University Social Calendar. DONALD S. PARKS, Dean of Men., is the most popular man in school. Besides his regular duties! Director of Personnel he is advisor to Inter-Fraternity Council. The one man in school with his finger con- tinually on the pulse of student life, he has established himself as a personality through his ever ready wit, an incessant stream of stories, and his constant availability. 23
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